Modi may address only one poll rally in Karnataka

Contrary to claims by state BJP leaders that Narendra Modi would conduct an extensive campaign tour ahead of the May 5 assembly elections in Karnataka, it appears that as of now the Gujarat chief minister would address only one public meeting.

indiaUpdated: May 02, 2013 19:32 IST

PTI

Contrary to claims by state BJP leaders that Narendra Modi would conduct an extensive campaign tour ahead of the May 5 assembly elections in Karnataka, it appears that as of now the Gujarat chief minister would address only one public meeting.

State unit BJP president Prahlad Joshi said Modi would address a public rally in the city on Sunday.

Asked by reporters why the party is not fully utilising the services of Modi for campaigning, Joshi said he would discuss with him regarding "the remaining dates" (of his campaigning in Karnataka).

But a party source said barring the rally slated to be held on the sprawling National College grounds here on Sunday, Modi is unlikely to spend more time in Karnataka for campaigning.

BJP chief Rajnath Singh, party stalwart LK Advani and Leader of Opposition Sushma Swaraj have already campaigned in the state, while leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitley played a key role in finalising the party's poll strategy and manifesto-drafting.

But the question in some quarters is about Modi's campaigning -- will it be "minimum" or "full-fledged" is something that's keenly looked forward to.

At a campaign-kick-off rally here earlier this month, state BJP leaders, including Joshi, chief minister Jagadish Shettar and senior party functionary HN Ananth Kumar, insisted Modi has expressed willingness to tour extensively and be at the party's disposal as far as election canvassing is concerned.

There has also been a strong demand from sections of BJP candidates to get the Gujarat strongman to campaign in their segments.

According to some party officials, Modi might be reluctant to conduct a full-fledged campaigning in Karnataka, where BJP is seen to be in not-so-strong-wicket, saddled as it is with anti-incumbency factor and a five-year-rule marked by scams, scandals and intra-party fights.